- rename tcp_ofld.[ch] to tcp_offload.[ch]
- document usage and locking conventions of the functions in the
toe_usrreqs function vector
- document tcpcb, inpcb, and socket fields used by toe
- widen the listen interface into 2 functions
- rename DISABLE_TCP_OFFLOAD to TCP_OFFLOAD_DISABLE
- shrink conditional compilation to reduce the likelihood of bitrot
- replace sc->sc_toepcb checks in tcp_syncache.c with TOEPCB_ISSET
deallocation and dynamic load balancing via the MALLOC_LAZY_FREE and
MALLOC_BALANCE knobs. This is a non-functional change, since these
features are still enabled when possible.
Clean up a few things that more pedantic compiler settings would cause
complaints over.
adds two new directories in msun: ld80 and ld128. These are for
long double functions specific to the 80-bit long double format
used on x86-derived architectures, and the 128-bit format used on
sparc64, respectively.
says they are never supposed to, and the fact that they did could
cause apps that run with unmasked FP exceptions to SIGFPE after a
scanf() or strtod(). The vendor stated that he will not be fixing
this, citing portability concerns.
- Accept the '0x' prefix so strtod("nan(0x...)", NULL) returns the same
thing as gcc's builtin nan("0x...") for such strings.
- Don't return uninitialized memory.
- Finish processing the string up to the closing ')' (provided it's
lexically valid) for compatibility with C99 and *scanf().
Implement -E option which will erase the filesystem sectors before
making the new filesystem. Reserved space in front of the superblock
(bootcode) is not erased.
NB: Erasing can take as long time as writing every sector sequentially.
This is relevant for all flash based disks which use wearlevelling.
or any other bio chopping geom a reasonable size of work.
Check for delivered signals between chunks, because the request size
and service time is unbounded.
with the same name exists, delete that directory first, before performing
the copy. This ensures that mv(1) across devices follows the semantics
of rename(2), as required by POSIX.
This change could introduce the potential of data loss, even if the
copy fails, violating the atomicity properties of rename(2). This is
(mostly) mitigated by first renaming the destination and obliterating
it only after a succesfull copy.
The above logic also led to the introduction of code that will cleanup
the results of a partial copy, if a cross-device copy fails.
PR: bin/118367
MFC after: 1 month